While working on her memoir about being sexy in one’s
sixties, Kate Crawford, the winner of this year’s Taos Resident Award reminds
herself to “start looking for all the things she can do, and stop looking for those
she couldn’t.”
The list of what Kate has been able to do just in the past
year is impressive: besides entering and
winning this contest, she has nearly completed building her house in Taos. She spent the winter working on “Second
Coming” a memoir of “creating a new paradigm for sexy sixties,” and is attending
TSWC to “hone her descriptive and humor skills” towards finding an agent and a
publisher for her book. Kate has
already put into practice the best this conference has to offer. She used skills learned in Priscilla Long’s
class last year to immediately query her memoir to Allison Hunter and Alexis
Hurley, literary agents, during the weekend class that followed.
Kate credits writing with helping her to have a life despite
struggling with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia. She began writing professionally after
winning a travel writing competition that earned her a trip around the world in
2002 and renewed respect from her doctor, who wondered “how she could go around
the world when she couldn’t go around the block.” Kate’s stories have appeared
in the “Boston Globe,” the “San Francisco Chronicle,” the “Washington Post,”
and “The Best Travel Writing of 2012.”
“Second Coming”—pun
intended—will be a mixture of vignettes and fantasies of Kate’s hilarious and
often tragicomic experiences as she conducts hands on research on her subject. Besides reading on everything there is to
know about sex at a certain age, and taking Flamenco, “to get life back in her,”
Kate has practiced research on related
subjects, from Kegel exercises to sexy underwear and other intimate accessoires, to employing the services of a dating
advisor. “You have to get used to being embarrassed,” she
says, as when the unthinkable happened while she was laughing hard during her
second date.
Kate’s scholarship winning story, Elephant Driving 101, takes place in Anantara, an elephant camp in
Thailand where she learned to bathe, mount, ride, and control her sixty five
year old elephant. Her piece is worth
reading just for the description of how one catapults oneself onto the back of
the twelve foot tall creature.
Kate promises to “tell it like it is” in her memoir, while
escorting readers on a trip to interesting locales that include her own
journey: “I am the protagonist, my
illness and my age are the antagonist.” Kate is excited about being in Taos for this
new chapter of her writing career, stating, “I have a life, I have a passion in
my life—and I take Cymbalta.”